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Featured researches published by S. Chaney.


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2007

Low-level human equivalent gestational lead exposure produces sex-specific motor and coordination abnormalities and late-onset obesity in year-old mice.

J. Leigh Leasure; A. Giddabasappa; S. Chaney; J. E. Johnson; Konstantinos Pothakos; Yuen-Sum Lau; Donald A. Fox

Background Low-level developmental lead exposure is linked to cognitive and neurological disorders in children. However, the long-term effects of gestational lead exposure (GLE) have received little attention. Objectives Our goals were to establish a murine model of human equivalent GLE and to determine dose–response effects on body weight, motor functions, and dopamine neurochemistry in year-old offspring. Methods We exposed female C57BL/6 mice to water containing 0, 27 (low), 55 (moderate), or 109 ppm (high) of lead from 2 weeks prior to mating, throughout gestation, and until postnatal day 10 (PN10). Maternal and litter measures, blood lead concentrations ([BPb]), and body weights were obtained throughout the experiment. Locomotor behavior in the absence and presence of amphetamine, running wheel activity, rotarod test, and dopamine utilization were examined in year-old mice. Results Peak [BPb] were < 1, ≤ 10, 24–27, and 33–42 μg/dL in control, low-, moderate- and high-dose GLE groups at PN0–10, respectively. Year-old male but not female GLE mice exhibited late-onset obesity. Similarly, we observed male-specific decreased spontaneous motor activity, increased amphetamine-induced motor activity, and decreased rotarod performance in year-old GLE mice. Levels of dopamine and its major metabolite were altered in year-old male mice, although only forebrain utilization increased. GLE-induced alterations were consistently larger in low-dose GLE mice. Conclusions Our novel results show that GLE produced permanent male-specific deficits. The nonmonotonic dose-dependent responses showed that low-level GLE produced the most adverse effects. These data reinforce the idea that lifetime measures of dose–response toxicant exposure should be a component of the neurotoxic risk assessment process.


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2010

Low-Level Gestational Lead Exposure Increases Retinal Progenitor Cell Proliferation and Rod Photoreceptor and Bipolar Cell Neurogenesis in Mice

A. Giddabasappa; W. Ryan Hamilton; S. Chaney; W. Xiao; J. E. Johnson; S. Mukherjee; Donald A. Fox

Background Gestational lead exposure (GLE) produces novel and persistent rod-mediated electroretinographic (ERG) supernormality in children and adult animals. Objectives We used our murine GLE model to test the hypothesis that GLE increases the number of neurons in the rod signaling pathway and to determine the cellular mechanisms underlying the phenotype. Results Blood lead concentrations ([BPb]) in controls and after low-, moderate-, and high-dose GLE were ≤ 1, ≤ 10, approximately 25, and approximately 40 μg/dL, respectively, at the end of exposure [postnatal day 10 (PND10)]; by PND30 all [BPb] measures were ≤ 1 μg/dL. Epifluorescent, light, and confocal microscopy studies and Western blots demonstrated that late-born rod photoreceptors and rod and cone bipolar cells (BCs), but not Müller glial cells, increased in a nonmonotonic manner by 16–30% in PND60 GLE offspring. Retinal lamination and the rod:cone BC ratio were not altered. In vivo BrdU (5-bromo-2-deoxyuridine) pulse-labeling and Ki67 labeling of isolated cells from developing mice showed that GLE increased and prolonged retinal progenitor cell proliferation. TUNEL (terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labeling) and confocal studies revealed that GLE did not alter developmental apoptosis or produce retinal injury. BrdU birth-dating and confocal studies confirmed the selective rod and BC increases and showed that the patterns of neurogenesis and gliogenesis were unaltered by GLE. Conclusions Our findings suggest two spatiotemporal components mediated by dysregulation of different extrinsic/intrinsic factors: increased and prolonged cell proliferation and increased neuronal (but not glial) cell fate. These findings have relevance for neurotoxicology, pediatrics, public health, risk assessment, and retinal cell biology because they occurred at clinically relevant [BPb] and correspond with the ERG phenotype.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2011

Gestational lead exposure selectively decreases retinal dopamine amacrine cells and dopamine content in adult mice

Donald A. Fox; W. Ryan Hamilton; J. E. Johnson; W. Xiao; S. Chaney; S. Mukherjee; Diane B. Miller; James P. O'Callaghan

Gestational lead exposure (GLE) produces supernormal scotopic electroretinograms (ERG) in children, monkeys and rats, and a novel retinal phenotype characterized by an increased number of rod photoreceptors and bipolar cells in adult mice and rats. Since the loss of dopaminergic amacrine cells (DA ACs) in GLE monkeys and rats contributes to supernormal ERGs, the retinal DA system was analyzed in mice following GLE. C57BL/6 female mice were exposed to low (27 ppm), moderate (55 ppm) or high (109 ppm) lead throughout gestation and until postnatal day 10 (PN10). Blood [Pb] in control, low-, moderate- and high-dose GLE was ≤ 1, ≤ 10, ~25 and ~40 μg/dL, respectively, on PN10 and by PN30 all were ≤ 1 μg/dL. At PN60, confocal-stereology studies used vertical sections and wholemounts to characterize tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) expression and the number of DA and other ACs. GLE dose-dependently and selectively decreased the number of TH-immunoreactive (IR) DA ACs and their synaptic plexus without affecting GABAergic, glycinergic or cholinergic ACs. Immunoblots and confocal revealed dose-dependent decreases in retinal TH protein expression and content, although monoamine oxidase-A protein and gene expression were unchanged. High-pressure liquid chromatography showed that GLE dose-dependently decreased retinal DA content, its metabolites and DA utilization/release. The mechanism of DA selective vulnerability is unknown. However, a GLE-induced loss/dysfunction of DA ACs during development could increase the number of rods and bipolar cells since DA helps regulate neuronal proliferation, whereas during adulthood it could produce ERG supernormality as well as altered circadian rhythms, dark/light adaptation and spatial contrast sensitivity.


Molecular Vision | 2007

Spatiotemporal regulation of ATP and Ca2+ dynamics in vertebrate rod and cone ribbon synapses

J. E. Johnson; Guy A. Perkins; A. Giddabasappa; S. Chaney; W. Xiao; White Ad; Joshua M. Brown; Jenna Waggoner; Mark H. Ellisman; Donald A. Fox


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2012

Spatiotemporal Development of Late-Born Rods and Bipolar Cells and Their Synapses in Mice with Gestational Lead Exposure

S. Chaney; S. Mukherjee; A. Giddabasappa; J. E. Johnson; Donald A. Fox


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2011

Low-Level Gestational Lead Exposure Induces Metabolomic Changes in Developing Mouse Retina

William D. Ferrell; S. Chaney; Donald A. Fox; Robert E. Marc; Bryan W. Jones


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2010

Gestational Lead Exposure (GLE) Enhanced Age-Related Retinal Degeneration and Outer Plexiform Layer (OPL) Remodeling

S. Chaney; R. Hao; J. E. Johnson; R. Hamilton; S. Mukherjee; W. Xiao; Donald A. Fox


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2009

Gestationally Lead-Exposed Mice With Increased Rods and Bipolar Cells Exhibit Late-Onset Rod and Bipolar Cell Degeneration

S. Chaney; A. Giddabasappa; J. E. Johnson; Donald A. Fox


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2009

Altered Regulation of Cell Cycle Progression and Exit Increases Retinal Progenitor Cell (RPC) Proliferation and Neuronal Differentiation During Gestational Lead Exposure (GLE)

S. Mukherjee; A. Giddabasappa; W. Xiao; B. Xu; S. Chaney; Donald A. Fox


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2008

Gestational Lead Exposure (GLE) Selectively Increases Late-Born Retinal Neurons, but Not Müller Glial Cells, by Differentially Regulating Basic Helix-Loop-Helix (bHLH) Genes

S. Mukherjee; A. Giddabasappa; W. Xiao; B. Xu; S. Chaney; Donald A. Fox

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J. E. Johnson

University of Houston–Downtown

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W. Xiao

University of Houston

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B. Xu

University of Houston

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Anand Swaroop

National Institutes of Health

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Guy A. Perkins

University of California

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